Dogs perceive the world primarily through scent, using their noses to gather detailed information in a way humans cannot
imagine. While people rely on sight and language to form impressions, dogs interpret identity, emotion, and health through smell. Their instinctive behavior, such as sniffing a personās crotch, can feel awkward to humans but is entirely natural for them. The apocrine glands in those areas release pheromones that communicate biological data, offering dogs a quick and authentic introduction. For them, this is simply a polite way to understand who someone is and how they are feeling in that moment.
Even when we intellectually understand this, the behavior can surprise or embarrass us because humans associate bodily privacy with boundaries dogs do not share. Yet a dogās intentions are grounded in curiosity and social instinct, not disrespect. If someone prefers to redirect the behavior, dogs can be guided gently with cues like āsitā or āleave it.ā With patience and clarity, they learn to respect human expectations. Recognizing their motivationāconnection rather than intrusionāhelps bridge the gap between instinct and etiquette.

